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Shame does not say, “I did something wrong.”
Shame says, “I am someone wrong.”
In this episode of Ruins to Revelation, we name shame for what it is: self-hatred that costs us intimacy with God, others, and ourselves. We explore the difference between guilt and shame, how shame drives us into hiding, and why the enemy uses it to fracture connection.
Rooted in Scripture from Genesis, Romans 8, Jeremiah 2, Ephesians 4, and Psalm 51, this conversation invites listeners out of isolation and back into the light. We talk honestly about covering, coping, and the broken cisterns we reach for when shame goes unaddressed.
This is not a call to perform repentance.
It is an invitation to release condemnation and walk hand in hand with Jesus again.
If you have been carrying shame for things done to you or by you, this episode is for you.
There is room at the table.
By Amanda ChristineShame does not say, “I did something wrong.”
Shame says, “I am someone wrong.”
In this episode of Ruins to Revelation, we name shame for what it is: self-hatred that costs us intimacy with God, others, and ourselves. We explore the difference between guilt and shame, how shame drives us into hiding, and why the enemy uses it to fracture connection.
Rooted in Scripture from Genesis, Romans 8, Jeremiah 2, Ephesians 4, and Psalm 51, this conversation invites listeners out of isolation and back into the light. We talk honestly about covering, coping, and the broken cisterns we reach for when shame goes unaddressed.
This is not a call to perform repentance.
It is an invitation to release condemnation and walk hand in hand with Jesus again.
If you have been carrying shame for things done to you or by you, this episode is for you.
There is room at the table.